Ted Hughes — Rain

Rain. Floods. Frost. And after frost, rain. Dull roof-drumming. Wraith-rain pulsing across purple-bare woods Like light across heaved water. Sleet in it. And the poor fields, miserable tents of their hedges. Mist-rain off-world. Hills wallowing In and out of a grey or silvery dissolution. A farm gleaming, Then all dull in the near drumming. At field-corners Brown water backing and briming in grass. Toads hop across rain-hammered roads. Every mutilated leaf there Looks like a frog or rained-out mouse. Cattle Wait under blackened backs. We drive post-holes. They half fill with water before the post goes in. Mud-water spurts as the iron bar slam-burns The oak stake-head dry. Cows Tamed on the wate mudded like a rugby field Stand and watch, come very close for company In the rain that goes on and on, and gets colder. They sniff the wire, sniff the tractor, watch. The hedges Are straggles of gap. A few haws. Every half-ton cow Sinks to the fetlock at every sliding stride. They are ruining their field and they know it. They look out sideways from under their brows which are Their only shelter. The sunk scrubby wood Is a pulverised wreck, rain riddles its holes To the drowned roots. A pheasant looking black In his waterproofs, bends at his job in the stubble. The mid-afternoon dusk soaks into The soaked thickets. Nothing protects them. The fox corpses lie beaten to their bare bones, Skin beaten off, brains and bowels beaten out. Nothing but their blueprint bones last in the rain, Sodden soft. Round their hack racks, calves Stand in a shine of mud. The calves look up, through plastered forelocks Without moving. Nowhere they can go Is less uncomfortable. The brimming world And the pouring sky are the only places For them to be. Fieldfares squeal over, sodden Toward the sodden wood. A raven, Cursing monotonously, goes over fast And vanishes in rain-mist. Magpies Shake themselves hopelessly, hop in the splatter. Misery. Surviving green of ferns and brambles is tumbled Like an abandoned scrapyard. The calves Wait deep beneath their spines. Cows roar Then hang their noses to the mud. Snipe go over, invisible in the dusk, With their squelching cries. 4 December 1973


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